W. V. Quine, by Alex Orenstein
I'll begin (as indeed I began) with the least interesting, although that's just personal prejudice: Quine belongs to the analytic tradition and linguistic turn in philosophy that I’m becoming increasingly distrustful of the more I read. Worthwhile reading, however, just to familiarize oneself with his essay “Two Dogmas of Empiricism,” and with the benefit of hindsight, useful for the context it gave to my subsequent reading.
Richard Rorty, by Alan Malachowski
I read this and felt like Kant awakening from his dogmatic slumbers after reading Hume (except, of course, without having written any philosophical masterpieces). When I studied philosophy, Quine was on the curriculum but not Rorty, and while I’ve had Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature on my shelf for five years or so, I’d only ever dipped into it and not really understood what all the fuss was about. Now I do, and I must confess that reading this book gave me a renewed enthusiasm for philosophy, even if Rorty sometimes feels like philosophy for people who don’t like philosophy. Like the Quine book, though, this one just happened to echo, connect with, and reinforce ideas emanating from the other works I’ve been reading and admiring, particularly works in anthropology, social sciences, politics, and philosophy. The possibility of a credible antifoundationalist anarchism that neither requires privileged access to “the Truth” nor slides into a radical postmodernist relativism increasingly strikes me as both feasible and exciting.
Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature, by Richard Rorty
Well of course I had to read it now, hadn’t I? But Christ it’s dull and dry in parts and he does tend to go on a bit. Still, there’s an interesting argument at the heart of it, which is basically that Philosophy took a wrong turn at Plato and we’ve been paying for it ever since. The central ideas of philosophy, the “binary oppositions” of appearance and reality, truth and error, right and wrong, encourage ways of thinking in philosophers that send them off on wild goose chases, trying to solve paradoxes of their own making. The idea that philosophy can provide the irrefutable foundation for science by establishing “what there really is” is a futile goal, in Rorty’s view. There is no reality “behind” appearances. Instead, all perceptions, statements, and entities are situated, relational. There is no God’s-eye view, no place where we can stand outside the universe to see how things “truly” are. Which is not to say that the sciences, including the social sciences, can’t provide information that is a better or worse account of the world, only that “better” and “worse” have to be measured against our own situated requirements, terms, and definitions. Rorty is a big fan of Dewey’s pragmatism, as you might be able to tell, but this "pragmatic" attitude is one that goes right back to Protagoras’s “Man is the measure of all things.” Rorty also sees it in the existentialists, Heidegger and Sartre in particular, whose philosophies begin with human beings in-the-world, making their own philosophy, living it, according to the world they find around them (Rorty is nothing if not a historicist; it was his youthful discovery that philosophers shifted their focus from subject to subject depending upon the zeitgeist in which they found themselves that stimulated his curiosity in the first place).
Philosophy and Social Hope, by Richard Rorty
A bunch of essays, some autobiographical, most not, dealing with the implications of Rorty’s pragmatism for political and social theory and policy. A former Trot, Rorty became a social-democrat liberal-leftie with strong communitarian tendencies (well, that’s my reading). Very enjoyable. Strikes me as the sort of bloke you might have had a pint or two with and then a scrap out on the street about phenomenology.
Philosophy, Politics, Autonomy, by Cornelius Castoriadis
Ah, Cornelius. I wonder if you’re any easier to read in Greek. All the same, some genuinely fascinating essays in here, with fun titles like “The Social-Historical: Mode of Being, Problems of Knowledge.” Cornelius’s central argument seems to be that twice in history, human beings have “woken up,” if you like, and realized that the society they live in is not something “natural” or “god-given” or eternal but something that they, human beings, sustain by virtue of their daily behaviour. Consequently, they were able to bring into question the foundations and structures of the world in which they lived and the way in which they lived. Thus was philosophy born, along with what he calls the "autonomous society": the two episodes in history that exemplify this awakening are ancient Greece, in particular the Athenian democracy, and what we call the Western world, for want of a better term, meaning the Enlightenment and its associated worldview, including wherever secular, humanistic thinking prevails (you can see how this relates to Rorty, can't you?). Having argued this, however, Castoriadis is of the view that our current "social imaginary" is increasingly at odds with the world itself and he maintains that we require a new awakening to break us free from the illusion that “technoscience,” the mastery and domination of Nature, is the best model for not just our relationship with the world but with one another. The closing paragraphs:
The phantasy of being all-powerful has undoubtedly existed ever since man became man. It has been coined into some power and it took refuge in magic, or military conquest. With its fecondation by its own offspring—rationality—it has, for the first time, been able to become actual historical power, the social imaginary signification dominating an entire world. If this has been possible, it is not only that the human imaginary has taken this turn and has provided itself with means other than magic or elementary military technology. It is also that the world—the “prehuman” world—lends itself to this happenstance and that this world is knowable and even manipulable.
The world is knowable to an apparently unlimited degree. It unveils to us, through our work, one after another of its connected yet heterogeneous strata. And yet, it clearly is not limitlessly manipulable—and this, not simply from the standpoint of “extent” (we cannot change the direction in which our galaxy rotates, for example), but also from a qualitative standpoint. We have clearly attained this limit, and we are in the process of crossing it at several points at once. Moreover, as I have tried to show, the most intimate sort of connection exists between the limitless unfolding of our knowledge and the limits we ought to impose on our manipulations [of the world].
Now, at the same time that the rage for “power,” the fetishism for “rational mastery,” waxes triumphant, the other great imaginary signification of Greco-Western history—that of autonomy, notably in its political manifestations—seems to be suffering an eclipse. The present crisis of humanity is a crisis of politics in the grand sense, a crisis of creativity and of our political imagination as well as of political participation by individuals. The reigning conditions of privatization and “individualism” give free rein, in the first place, to the arbitrariness of the Apparatuses and, at a deeper level, to the autonomized march of technoscience.
This is the ultimate point of the question at hand. The enormous dangers, the very absurdity contained in the all-out, directionless development of technoscience, cannot be avoided simply by promulgating a few “rules” set forth once and for all, or by installing a “panel of wise men” who would become merely a tool, if not themselves the actual subject, of a tyranny. What is required is more than a “reform of the human understanding”; it is a reform of the human being as social-historical being, an ethos of mortality, a self-surpassing of Reason. We have no need for a few “wise men.” What we need is for the greatest number of people to acquire and exercise wisdom—which in its turn requires a radical transformation of society qua political society, thereby instaurating not simply formal participation but also actual passion on the part of all for the common affairs of humanity. Wise human beings, however, are the very last thing that present-day culture produces.
“What is it that you want, then? To change humanity?”
“No, something infinitely more modest: simply that humanity change, as it has already done two or three times.”
Cornelius also has some interesting observations too on the manmade nature of science; he takes an anti-Platonic stance on mathematics, arguing that Godel’s theorem demonstrates that even the Queen of the Sciences lacks a foundation that can be independently established. Since mathematics provides the basis for measurement, formulas, equations, and so on in all other sciences, we ought to conclude that they too, lack a foundation that is anything other than manmade.
The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism, by Naomi Klein
The only book I didn’t finish, partly out of disappointment, partly out of boredom. I very much enjoyed No Logo; it told me a lot of things I didn’t already know. This book doesn’t. If you’re over 40 and have had even the remotest interest in 20th-century politics, then the story Klein relates here will be largely familiar to you. I guess her target audience consists of teenagers, twentysomethings, and easily impressed thritysomethings. Her “shock doctrine” metaphor is tenuous at best, tying up all manner of barely related phenomena. I guess she had a two-book deal and after No Logo she was stumbling around for something else to write and managed to concost this feeble but new angle on old news and figured, “that’ll do.” Not that I have anything against her message. I’d just heard it before, better told.
Caliban and the Witch: Women, the Body and Primitive Accumulation, by Silvia Federici
A phenomenal book, the introduction to which I reproduced below (the book is covered by anticopyright). Not much more to add to what Federici herself outlines there: The witch hunts were intended to discipline women into being baby factories to provide the labour force and cannon fodder for the factories, mills, mines, and military conquests of newly emergent capitalism and empire. A form of bodily enclosure that accompanied the geographical one.
The Gift: Form and Reason for Exchange in Archaic Societies, by Marcel Mauss
Ground-breaking in its day, but I don’t think there’s much in this book-length essay now that would surprise social scientists: Gifts entail obligations. Gift economies can be as aggressive and hierarchical as non-gift economies. Potlatches sound bonkers but make perfect sense once you understand the economy at work. And so on. I'd have liked more pictures.
Infinitely Demanding: Ethics of Commitment, Politics of Resistance, by Simon Critchley
A surprisingly small book in which Critchley tries to make a case for “anarchism as an ethical practice and a remotivating means of political organization” (I’m quoting the blurb on the back). He does so by recourse to Kant, Levinas, Badiou and Lacan, which is why I found it unconvincing and unnecessarily circuitous. Castoriadis makes a much better and simpler case, albeit in even denser language.
L’Oréal Took My Home, by Monica Waitzfelder
Yes, they did, the bastards. Not the best-written book, but then Monica Waitzfelder isn’t a writer. Nevertheless, the anger, passion, and sense of injustice comes through on every page.
A lot of the information in the book can be found elsewhere, but if you want another reason to despise Andi MacDowell, here you go (from the preface by Serge Klarsfeld):
L’Oréal’s past should have led this giant company to develop greater understanding of Edith and Monica: Eugene Schueller, the creator of L’Oréal, was also one of the founders of La Cagoule, the extreme right-wing movement which collaborated with the Nazis and, which, among other things, blew up six synagogues in Paris in 1941. Jacques Corrèze who was responsible for L’Oréal’s busines activity in the United States was forced to resign in 1991, when I revealed that , as head of the collaborationist organisation, MSR, he had expelled Jews from their dwellings in 1941. As for Andre Bettencourt, the husband of L’Oréal’s owner, Eugène Schueller’s daughter, he began his brilliant career in the foulest of ways by publishing dozens of articles between 1940 and 1942 in la Terre française, a prominent agricultural affairs newspaper created by the Germans. Some of these articles have an undeniably anti-Semitic character.
And there’s plenty more besides.
That’s you lot up to date. I got Contingency, Irony and Solidarity in Hodges Figgis yesterday lunchtime, so expect more Rorty soon.
10 comments:
Great reviewing. You're a glutton for punishment! I'm still "drowning in honey, stingless" in Brideshead Revisited. Thanks for saving me from Mauss though. Not worth reading you reckon?
Hi Stuart--
You're the anthropologist, so you might get more out of Mauss than I did! But I also found his style hard-going, which really can't be justified on "scientific" grounds; his argument could easily have been leavened by anecdotes, examples, conversations.
Academics can be such bores sometimes. ;-)
Tell me about it! And here's another question for you (a genuine one, I'm not spoiling for a brawl in the pub car park over phenomenology, about which I know zero!)
I agree with the proposition that there is a reality that lies behind appearances, and science is the way to understand it. What practically would the consequences of Rorty's view be for, say, Darwinism and climate science?
Cheers
Hi Stuart--
In practical terms, none whatsoever, but then Rorty draws heavily on Kuhn's theories about paradigm change, and Darwinism is the standard paradigm of "normal science" as far as biology is concerned. That isn't to say that it won't be superceded by something better centuries from now, following a revolutionary transformation in our understanding of Nature.
Materialism doesn't actually need a reality behind appearances. If we accept Rorty's view, the world can only be encountered, measured, and so on via one form of appearance or another. It's impossible to get "behind" appearances, as it were. Even when Castoriadis talks about the world "unveiling" itself limitlessly, revealing itself in new ways (and without wanting to put words into the mouth of a dead man), Rorty can argue that the new revelations are nothing more than that: new ways of perceiving objects that we previously only thought could be perceived in the old ways.
I should perhaps clarify futher that Rorty finds all the subject/object appearance/reality dichotomies unhelpful and doesn't think we should use them because they lead to (manmade) paradoxes that cannot be resolved. Perhaps a better way of phrasing it is to say that we, humans, are not distinct or set apart from Nature at all, but entirely immersed, situated in it, and objects "disclose" (for want of a better term) themselves to us as they truly are, but they always do so under lots of different conditions (in such and such a light, using such and such tools of measurement, perception, and so on). We never see an object in its entirety at any one time, only one aspect of it.
Probably no clearer, but I gave it a shot. ;-)
Thanks John. What about this, then? Although this table appears to be a solid object to human eyes, the reality behind appearances is that it's made up of atoms, which in turn are almost entirely empty space. What would Rorty say to that? And would I understand what he'd said? ;-)
I think he'd say that they're both reality, only presented in different guises. There's nothing wrong in establishing causal relationships between different perceptions of an object, but if you argue that the vibrating atoms are the "reality" behind our everyday perceptions, what's to prevent an eternal regression and asking what are the causal objects behind our perception of atoms, and once we are able to locate and perceive those causal entities, what are the "real" objects behind our perceptions of them?
Two other points that are relevant to Rorty's pragmatism, I think. Given the Kuhnian influence in his work, he'd say the idea that the vibrating atoms in the table constitute the essence of what is there is just another case of normal science, of us using the language of physics in its standard, recognized paradigm. It's highly likely that the language of physics will change again and that we'll stop thinking in terms of vibrating atoms but some other "building blocks" of the universe in the future.
Secondly, the terms and categories used by physics is fine for physicists and for conducting work at that level, but the grain in the wood is of more consequence to the carpenter, the shape of the table to the interior designer, the weight of the table to the removal man. These are no less real than the vibrating atoms that constitute the qualities of the table as they interest the physicist. Pragmatism recognizes different languages and categories for different aspects of the world we live in. Trying to determine which reality is the "real real one" is a wild goose chase.
I think.
Ah, I get it, I think! Thanks John.
Phew!;-)
Incidentally, Rorty isn't saying that this is how the world really is! As a pragmatist, he can't say that without contradicting himself. He's just suggesting that it may be more useful for us to talk about the world in this way and spend less time on paradoxes of our own making.
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