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The text, written by philosopher Bry Willis, presents a critical overview of the Enlightenment’s foundational belief in universal reason through a comparative analysis of three key figures and concepts. It uses the proverb “In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king,” attributed to Erasmus, as a starting point to represent the Enlightenment’s presumption that superior knowledge confers automatic sovereignty. The author then argues that H.G. Wells’s short story, The Country of the Blind, serves as a literary act of “vandalism” that destroys this notion, showing that advantage is meaningless without cultural context. Further support is drawn from Plato’s Allegory of the Cave, which illustrates that those who possess truth may be rejected by the communities they seek to enlighten, and Iain McGilchrist’s neurological model reinforces this critique by suggesting that Western culture has mistakenly let the left-brain’s narrow, procedural rationality (the “emissary”) dominate the broader, contextual understanding of the right brain (the “Master”). Ultimately, the source concludes that rationality is not a universal force but a "parochial dialect," whose power is contingent on the specific culture that endorses it. 👉 https://philosophics.blog/2025/11/20/one-eyed-king/