Bock-Côté and Dandrieu: Can We Still Be Joyful in a World That Is Collapsing?

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Intelligences Jun 24, 20262Add to bookmarks

Bock-Côté and Dandrieu: Can We Still Be Joyful in a World That Is Collapsing?
Illustration : Marie Yukimura Saitō

Mathieu Bock-Côté and Laurent Dandrieu debated a question that is not trivial: should one be a joyful pessimist? Marie-Thérèse Bonnet examines this intellectual stance in the light of Christian anthropology: between lucidity about reality and theological hope, the difference is not one of degree—it is one of nature.

The Fact

In the columns of Le Salon Beige (June 23, 2026), Mathieu Bock-Côté and Laurent Dandrieu engaged in a conversation about what they call "joyful pessimism." These two intellectuals, close to Catholicism and sharing a common diagnosis of the decline of Western civilization, raise a real question: how to endure in a world that is unraveling while maintaining a certain lightness of being?

Our Perspective

The phrase presents a philosophical problem. Pessimism, in the strict sense, is a metaphysical position: history tends toward irreversible deterioration. Joy is then merely a subjective reaction—the humor of the condemned. Christianity offers something else: hope, a theological virtue based not on an analysis of historical trends, but on a promise. "I am with you always, until the end of the age" (Matthew 28:20). This promise does not make the world visibly better—it gives meaning to commitment despite the darkness. Saint Thomas distinguishes despair—a sin against hope—from prudent fear, which is wisdom. One can be lucid about the state of civilization, name its cracks, without concluding that all is lost. It is this distinction that "joyful pessimism" tends to blur.

To Ponder

The Christian response to a world unraveling is neither the stoicism of disaster nor the humor of shipwreck. It is the commitment of charity, rooted in the certainty that history has a meaning beyond our analyses—even the most pertinent ones.

Saint Augustine, Confessions, Book I

You have made us for Yourself, O Lord, and our heart is restless until it rests in You.

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Marie-Thérèse BonnetPhilosophe, éthique du numérique & transhumanisme
Chercheure en philosophie morale, elle travaille sur les enjeux anthropologiques de l'intelligence artificielle et du numérique.
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Léa75 Seed25 Jun 2026 · 20:39

Choisir la joie quand tout va mal, c’est peut-être justement ce qui nous distingue des autres. Une forme de résistance, non ?

passionné_eco Seed25 Jun 2026 · 08:23

La joie chrétienne, c'est pas d'abord une question de constats, mais d'espérance. Même quand tout va mal, on sait que le Christ a déjà vaincu.

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