| Trotsky and the Wild Orchids (1992) |
| Richard Rorty |
Neal Kozody, writing in the monthly
bulletin
of the Committee for the Free World,
an organization
known for its vigilance against symptoms
of moral weakness, denounces my 'cynical
and nihilistic view' and says 'it is
not
enough for him [Rorty] that American
students
should be merely mindless; he would
have
them positively mobilized for mindlessness'.
Richard Neuhaus, a theologian who doubts
that atheists can be good American
citizens,
says that the 'ironist vocabulary'
I advocate
'can neither provide a public language
for
the citizens of a democracy, nor contend
intellectually against the enemies
of democracy,
nor transmit the reasons for democracy
to
the next generation'. My criticisms
of Allan
Bloom's The Closing of the American
Mind
led Harvey Mansfield a recently appointed
by President Bush to the National Council
for the Humanities a to say that
I have
'given up on America' and that I 'manage
to diminish even Dewey'. ( Mansfield
recently
described Dewey as a 'medium-sized
malefactor'.)
His colleague on the council, my fellow
philosopher
John Searle, thinks that standards
can only
be restored to American higher education
if people abandon the views on truth,
knowledge
and objectivity that I do my best to
inculcate.
Yet Sheldon Wolin, speaking from the
left,
sees a lot of similarity between me
and Allan
Bloom: both of us, he says, are intellectual
snobs who care only about the leisured,
cultured
elite to which we [4]belong. Neither
of us
has anything to say to blacks, or to
other
groups who have been shunted aside
by American
society. Wolins view is echoed by
Terry
Eagleton, Britain 's leading Marxist
thinker.
Eagleton says that 'in [Rorty's] ideal
society
the intellectuals will be "ironists",
practising a suitably cavalier, laid-back
attitude to their own belief, while
the masses,
for whom such self-ironizing might
prove
too subversive a weapon, will continue
to
salute the flag and take life seriously'.
Der Spiegel said that I 'attempt to
make
the yuppie regression look good'. Jonathan
Culler, one of Derrida's chief disciples
and expositors, says that my version
of pragmatism
'seems altogether appropriate to the
age
of Reagan'. Richard Bernstein says
that my
views are 'little more than an ideological
apologia for an old-fashioned version
of
Cold War liberalism dressed up in fashionable
"post-modem" discourse'.
The left's
favourite word for me is 'complacent',
just
as the right's is 'irresponsible'.
The left's hostility is partially explained
by the fact that most people who admire
Nietzsche,
Heidegger and Derrida as much as I
do most
of the people who either classify themselves
as 'postmodernist' or (like me) find
themselves
thus classified willynilly participate
in what Jonathan Yardley has called
the 'America
Sucks Sweepstakes'. Participants in
this
event compete to find better, bitterer
ways
of describing the United States . They
see
our country as embodying everything
that
is wrong with the rich post-Enlightenment
West. They see ours as what Foucault
called
a 'disciplinary society', dominated
by an
odious ethos of 'liberal individualism',
an ethos which produces racism, sexism,
consumerism
and Republican presidents. By contrast,
I
see America pretty much as Whitman
and Dewey
did, as opening a prospect on illimitable
democratic vistas. I think that our
country
a despite its past and present atrocities
and vices, and despite its continuing
eagerness
to elect fools and knaves to high office
is a good example of the best kind
of society
so far invented.
The right's hostility is largely explained
by the fact that rightist thinkers
don't
think that it is enough just to prefer
democratic
societies. One also has to believe
that they
are Objectively Good, that the institutions
of such societies are grounded in Rational
First Principles Especially if one
teaches
philosophy, as I do, one is expected
to tell
[5] the young that their society is
not just
one of the better ones so far contrived,
but one which embodies Truth and Reason.
Refusal to say this sort of thing counts
as the 'treason of the clerks' as
an abdication
of professional and moral responsibility.
My own philosophical views views
I share
with Nietzsche and Dewey a forbid
me to
say this kind of thing. I do not have
much
use for notions like 'objective value'
and
'objective truth'. I think that the
so-called
postmodernists are right in most of
their
criticisms of traditional philosophical
talk
about 'reason'. So my philosophical
views
offend the right as much as my political
preferences offend the left.
I am sometimes told, by critics from
both
ends of the political spectrum, that
my views
are so weird as to be merely frivolous.
They
suspect that I will say anything to
get a
gasp, that I am just amusing myself
by contradicting
everybody else. This hurts. So I have
tried,
in what follows, to say something about
how
I got into my present position how
I got
into philosophy, and then found myself
unable
to use philosophy for the purpose I
had originally
had in mind. Perhaps this bit of autobiography
will make clear that, even if my views
about
the relation of philosophy and politics
are
odd, they were not adopted for frivolous
reasons.
When I was 12, the most salient books
on
my parents' shelves were two red-bound
volumes,
The Case of Leon Trotsky and Not Guilty.
These made up the report of the Dewey
Commission
of Inquiry into the Moscow Trials.
I never
read them with the wide-eyed fascination
I brought to books like Krafft-Ebing's
Psychopathia
Sexualis, but I thought of them in
the way
in which other children thought of
their
family's Bible: they were books that
radiated
redemptive truth and moral splendour.
If
I were a really good boy, I would say
to
myself, I should have read not only
the Dewey
Commission reports, but also Trotsky's
History
of the Russian Revolution, a book I
started
many times but never managed to finish.
For
in the 1940s, the Russian Revolution
and
its betrayal by Stalin were, for me,
what
the Incarnation and its betrayal by
the Catholics
had been to precocious little Lutherans
400
years before.
My father had almost, but not quite,
accompanied
John Dewey to [6] Mexico as PR man
for the
Commission of Inquiry which Dewey chaired.
Having broken with the American Communist
Party in 1932, my parents had been
classified
by the Daily Worker as Trotskyites',
and
they more or less accepted the description.
When Trotsky was assassinated in 1940,
one
of his secretaries, John Frank, hoped
that
the GPU would not think to look for
him in
the remote little village on the Delaware
river where we were living. Using a
pseudonym,
he was our guest in Flatbrookville
for some
months. I was warned not to disclose
his
real identity, though it is doubtful
that
my schoolmates at Walpack Elementary
would
have been interested in my indiscretions.
I grew up knowing that all decent people
were, if not Trotskyites, at least
socialists.
I also knew that Stalin had ordered
not only
Trotsky's assassination but also Kirov
's,
Ehrlich's, Alter's and Carlo Tresca's.
(Tresca,
gunned down on the streets of New York
,
had been a family friend.) I knew that
poor
people would always be oppressed until
capitalism
was overcome. Working as an unpaid
office
boy during my twelfth winter, I carried
drafts
of press releases from the Workers'
Defense
League office offGramercy Park (where
my
parents worked) to Norman Thomas's
(the Socialist
Party's candidate for president) house
around
the comer, and also to A. Philip Randolph's
office at the Brotherhood of Pullman
Car
Porters on i25th Street. On the subway,
I
would read the documents I was carrying.
They told me a lot about what factory
owners
did to union organizers, plantation
owners
to sharecroppers, and the white locomotive
engineers' union to the coloured firemen
(whose jobs white men wanted, now that
diesel
engines were replacing coal-fired steam
engines).
So, at 12, I knew that the point of
being
human was to spend one's life fighting
social
injustice.
But I also had private, weird, snobbish,
incommunicable interests. In earlier
years
these had been in Tibet . I had sent
the
newly enthroned Dalai Lama a present,
accompanied
by warm congratulations to a fellow
eight-year-old
who had made good. A few years later,
when
my parents began dividing their time
between
the Chelsea Hotel and the mountains
of north-west
New Jersey , these interests switched
to
orchids. Some 40 species of wild orchids
occur in those mountains, and I eventually
found
17 of them. Wild orchids are uncommon,
and
[7] rather hard to spot. I prided myself
enormously on being the only person
around
who knew where they grew, their Latin
names
and their blooming times. When in New
York
, I would go to the 42 nd Street public
library
to reread a nineteenth-century volume
on
the botany of the orchids of the eastern
U S.
I was not quite sure why those orchids
were
so important, but I was convinced that
they
were. I was sure that our noble, pure,
chaste,
North American wild orchids were morally
superior to the showy, hybridized,
tropical
orchids displayed in florists' shops.
I was
also convinced that there was a deep
significance
in the fact that the orchids are the
latest
and most complex plants to have been
developed
in the course of evolution. Looking
back,
I suspect that there was a lot of sublimated
sexuality involved
(orchids being a notoriously sexy sort
of
flower), and that my desire to learn
all
there was to know about orchids was
linked
to my desire to understand all the
hard words
in Krafit-Ebing.
I was uneasily aware, however, that
there
was something a bit dubious about this
esotericism
this interest in socially useless
flowers.
I had read (in the vast amount of spare
time
given to a clever, snotty, nerdy only
child)
bits of Marius the Epicurean and also
bits
of Marxist criticisms of Pater's aestheticism.
I was afraid that Trotsky (whose Literature
and Revolution I had nibbled at) would
not
have approved of my interest in orchids.
At fifteen I escaped from the bullies
who
regularly beat me up on the playground
of
my high school (bullies who, I assumed,
would
somehow wither away once capitalism
had been
overcome) by going off to the so-called
Hutchins
College of the University of Chicago.
(This
was the institution immortalized by
A. J.
Liebling as 'the biggest collection
of juvenile
neurotics since the Children's Crusade'.)
Insofar as I had any project in mind,
it
was to reconcile Trotsky and the orchids.
I wanted to find some intellectual
or aesthetic
framework which would let me in a
thrilling
phrase which I came across in Yeats
'hold
reality and justice in a single vision'.
By reality I meant more or less, the
Wordsworthian
moments in which, in the woods around
Flatbrookville
(and especially in the presence of
certain
coralroot orchids, and of the smaller
yellow
lady slipper), I had felt [8] touched
by
something numinous, something of ineffable
importance. By justice I meant what
Norman
Thomas and Trotsky both stood for,
the liberation
of the weak from the strong. I wanted
a way
to be both an intellectual and spiritual
snob and a friend of humanity a nerd
recluse
and a fighter for justice. I was very
confused,
but reasonably sure that at Chicago
I would
find out how grown-ups managed to work
the
trick I had in mind.
When I got to Chicago (in 1946), I
found
that Hutchins, together with his friends
Mortimer Adler and Richard McKeon (the
villain
of Pirsig's Zen and the Art of Motorcycle
Maintenance), had enveloped much of
the University
of Chicago in a neo-Aristotelian mystique.
The most frequent target of their sneers
was John Dewey's pragmatism. That pragmatism
was the philosophy of my parents' friend
Sidney Hook, as well as the unofficial
philosophy
of most of the other New York intellectuals
who had given up on dialectical materialism.
But according to Hutchins and Adier,
pragmatism
was vulgar, 'relativistic', and self-refuting.
As they pointed out over and over again,
Dewey had absolutes. To say, as Dewey
did,
that 'growth itself is the only moral
end',
left one without a criterion for growth,
and thus with no way refute Hitler's
suggestion
that Germany had 'grown' under his
rule.
To say that truth is what works is
to reduce
the quest for truth to the quest for
power.
Only an appeal to something eternal,
absolute,
and good like the God of St Thomas,
or
the 'nature of human beings' described
by
Aristotle would permit one to answer
the
Nazis, to justify one's choice of social
democracy over fascism.
This quest for stable absolutes was
common
to the neo-Thomist and to Leo Strauss,
the
teacher who attracted the best of the
Chicago
students (including my classmate Allan
Bloom).
The Chicago faculty was dotted with
awesomely
learned refugees from Hitler, of which
Strauss
was the most revered. All of them seemed
to agree that something deeper and
weightier
than Dewey was needed if one was to
explain
why it would be better to be dead than
to
be a Nazi. This sounded pretty good
to my
15-year-old ears. For moral and philosophical
absolutes sounded a bit like my beloved
orchids
numinous, hard to find, known only
to a
chosen few. Further, since Dewey was
a hero
to all the people among whom I had
grown
up, scorning [9] Dewey was a convenient
form
of adolescent revolt. The only question
was
whether this scorn should take a religious
or a philosophical form, and how it
might
be combined with striving for social
justice.
Like many of my classmates at Chicago
, I
knew lots of T. S. Eliot by heart.
I was
attracted by Eliot's suggestions that
only
committed Christians (and perhaps only
Anglo-Catholics)
could overcome their unhealthy preoccupation
with their private obsessions, and
so serve
their fellow humans with proper humility.
But a prideful inability to believe
what
I was saying when I recited the General
Confession
gradually led me to give up on my awkward
attempts to get religion. So I fell
back
on absolutist philosophy.
I read through Plato during my fifteenth
summer, and convinced myself that Socrates
was right virtue was knowledge. That
claim
was music to my ears, for I had doubts
about
my own moral character and a suspicion
that
my only gifts were intellectual ones.
Besides,
Socrates had to be right, for only
then could
one hold reality and justice in a single
vision. Only if he were right could
one hope
to be both as good as the best Christians
(such as Alyosha in The Brothers Karamazov,
whom I could not and still cannot
decide
whether to envy or despise) and as
learned
and clever as Strauss and his students.
So
I decided to major in philosophy. I
figured
that if I became a philosopher I might
get
to the top of Plato's 'divided line'
the
place 'beyond hypotheses' where the
full
sunshine of Truth irradiates the purified
soul of the wise and good: an Elysian
field
dotted with immaterial orchids. It
seemed
obvious to me that getting to such
a place
was what everybody with any brains
really
wanted. It also seemed clear that Platonism
had all the advantages of religion,
without
requiring the humility which Christianity
demanded, and of which I was apparently
incapable.
For all these reasons, I wanted very
much
to be some kind of Platonist, and from
15
to 20 I did my best. But it didn't
pan out.
I could never figure out whether the
Platonic
philosopher was aiming at the ability
to
offer irrefutable argument - argument
which
rendered him able to convince anyone
he encountered
of what he believed (the sort of thing
Ivan
Karamazov was good at) or instead
was aiming
[10] at a sort of incommunicable, private
bliss (the sort of thing his brother
Alyosha
seemed to possess). The first goal
is to
achieve argumentative power over others
e. g., to become able to convince bullies
that they should not beat one up, or
to convince
rich capitalists that they must cede
their
power to a cooperative, egalitarian
commonwealth.
The second goal is to enter a state
in which
all your own doubts are stilled, but
in which
you no longer wish to argue. Both goals
seemed
desirable, but I could not see how
they could
be fitted together.
At the same time as I was worrying
about
this tension within Platonism and
within
any form of what Dewey had called 'the
quest
for certainty' I was also worrying
about
the familiar problem of how one could
possibly
get a noncircular justification of
any debatable
stand on any important issue. The more
philosophers
I read, the clearer it seemed that
each of
them could carry their views back to
first
principles which were incompatible
with the
first principles of their opponents,
and
that none of them ever got to that
fabled
place 'beyond hypotheses'. There seemed
to
be nothing like a neutral standpoint
from
which these alternative first principles
could be evaluated. But if there were
no
such standpoint, then the whole idea
of 'rational
certainty', and the whole Socratic-Platonic
idea of replacing passion by reason,
seemed
not to make much sense.
Eventually I got over the worry about
circular
argumentation by deciding that the
test of
philosophical truth was overall coherence,
rather than deducibility from unquestioned
first principles. But this didn't help
much.
For coherence is a matter of avoiding
contradictions,
and St Thomas 's advice, 'When you
meet a
contradiction, make a distinction,'
makes
that pretty easy. As far as I could
see,
philosophical talent was largely a
matter
of proliferating as many distinctions
as
were needed to wriggle out of a dialectical
comer. More generally, it was a matter,
when
trapped in such a comer, of redescribing
the nearby intellectual terrain in
such a
way that the terms used by one's opponent
would seem irrelevant, or question-begging,
or jejune. I turned out to have a flair
for
such redescription. But I became less
and
less certain that developing this skill
was
going to make me either wise or virtuous.
Since that initial disillusion (which
climaxed
about the time I left [11] Chicago
to get
a Ph. D. in philosophy at Yale), I
have spent
40 years looking for a coherent and
convincing
way of formulating my worries about
what,
if anything, philosophy is good for.
My starting
point was the discovery of Hegel's
Phenomenology
of Spirit, a book which I read as saying:
granted that philosophy is just a matter
of out-redescribing the last philosopher,
the cunning of reason can make use
even of
this sort of competition. It can use
it to
weave the conceptual fabric of a freer,
better,
more just society. If philosophy can
be,
at best, only what Hegel called 'its
time
held in thought', still, that might
be enough.
For by thus holding one's time, one
might
do what Marx wanted done change the
world.
So even if there were no such thing
as 'understanding
the world' in the Platonic sense
an understanding
from a position outside of time and
history
- perhaps there was still a social
use for
my talents, and for the study of philosophy.
For quite a while after I read Hegel,
I thought
that the two greatest achievements
of the
species to which I belonged were The
Phenomenology
of Spirit and Remembrance of Things
Past
(the book which took the place of the
wild
orchids once I left Flatbrookville
for Chicago
). Proust's ability to weave intellectual
and social snobbery together with the
hawthorns
around Combray, his grandmother's selfless
love, Odette's orchidaceous embraces
of Swann
and Jupien's of Charlus, and with everything
else he encountered to give each
of these
its due without feeling the need to
bundle
them together with die help of a religious
faith or a philosophical theory - seemed
to me as astonishing as Hegel's ability
to
throw himself successively into empiricism,
Greek tragedy, Stoicism, Christianity
and
Newtonian physics, and to emerge from
each,
ready and eager for something completely
different. It was the cheerful commitment
to irreducible temporality which Hegel
and
Proust shared the specifically anti
Platonic
element in their work that seemed
so wonderful.
They both seemed able to weave everything
they encountered into a narrative without
asking that that narrative have a moral,
and without asking how that narrative
would
appear under the aspect of eternity.
About 20 years or so after I decided
that
the young Hegel's willingness to stop
trying
for eternity, and just be the child
of his
time, was [12] the appropriate response
to
disillusionment with Plato, I found
myself
being led back to Dewey. Dewey now
seemed
to me a philosopher who had learned
all that
Hegel had to teach about how to eschew
certainty
and eternity, while immunizing himself
against
pantheism by taking Darwin seriously.
This
rediscovery of Dewey coincided with
my first
encounter with Derrida (which I owe
to Jonathan
Arc, my colleague at Princeton ). Derrida
led me back to Heidegger, and I was
struck
by the resemblances between Dewey's,
Wittgenstein's
and Heidegger's criticisms of Cartesianism.
Suddenly things began to come together.
I
thought I saw a way to blend a criticism
of the Cartesian tradition with the
quasi-Hegelian
historicism of Michel Foucault, Lan
Hacking
and Alasdair Maclntyre. I thought that
I
could fit all these into a quasi-Heideggerian
story about the tensions within Platonism.
The result of this small epiphany was
a book
called Philosophy and the Mirror of
Nature.
Though disliked by most of my fellow
philosophy
professors, this book had enough success
among nonphilosophers to give me a
self-confidence
I had previously lacked. But Philosophy
and
the Mirror of Nature did not do much
for
my adolescent ambitions. The topics
it treated
the mind-body problem, controversies
in
the philosophy of language about truth
and
meaning, Kuhnian philosophy of science
were pretty remote from both Trotsky
and
the orchids. I had gotten back on good
terms
with Dewey; I had articulated my historicist
anti-Platonism; I had finally figured
out
what I thought about the direction
and value
of current movements in analytic philosophy;
I had sorted out most of the philosophers
whom I had read. But I had not spoken
to
any of the questions which got me started
reading philosophers in the first place.
I was no closer to the single vision
which,
30 years back, I had gone to college
to get.
As I tried to figure out what had gone
wrong,
I gradually decided :hat the whole
idea of
holding reality and justice in a single
vision
had leen a mistake that a pursuit
of such
a vision had been precisely what led
Plato
astray. More specifically, I decided
that
only religion only a nonargumentative
faith
in a surrogate parent who, unlike my
real
parent, embodied love, power and justice
in equal measure could do the trick
Plato
wanted done. Since I couldnt imagine
becoming
religious, and indeed had gotten more
and
more raucously [13] secularist, I decided
that the hope of getting a single vision
by becoming a philosopher had been
a self-deceptive
atheist's way out. So I decided to
write
a book about what intellectual life
might
be like if one could manage to give
up the
Platonic attempt to hold reality and
justice
in a single vision.
That book - Contingency, Irony and
Solidarity
argues that there is no need to weave
one's
personal equivalent of Trotsky and
one's
personal equivalent of my wild orchids
together.
Rather, one should try to abjure the
temptation
to tie in one's moral responsibilities
to
other people with one's relation to
whatever
idiosyncratic things or persons one
loves
with all one's heart and soul and mind
(or,
if you like, the things or persons
one is
obsessed with). The two will, for some
people,
coincide as they do in those lucky
Christians
for whom the love of God and of other
human
beings are inseparable, or revolutionaries
who are moved by nothing save the thought
of social justice. But they need not
coincide,
and one should not try too hard to
make them
do so. So, for example, Jean-Paul Sartre
seemed to me right when he denounced
Kant's
self-deceptive quest for certainty,
but wrong
when he denounced Proust as a useless
bourgeois
wimp, a man whose life and writings
were
equally irrelevant to the only thing
that
really mattered, the struggle to overthrow
capitalism.
Proust's life and work were, in fact,
irrelevant
to that struggle. But that is a silly
reason
to despise Proust. It is as wrong-headed
as Savonarola's contempt for the works
of
art he called 'vanities'. Singlemindedness
of this Sartrean or Savonarolan sort
is the
quest for purity of heart the attempt
to
will one thing gone rancid. It is
the attempt
to see yourself as an incarnation of
something
larger than yourself (the Movement,
Reason,
the Good, the Holy) rather than accepting
your finitude. The latter means, among
other
things, accepting that what matters
most
to you may well be something that may
never
matter much to most people. Your equivalent
of my orchids may always seem merely
weird,
merely idiosyncratic, to practically
everybody
else. But that is no reason to be ashamed
of, or downgrade, or try to slough
off, your
Wordsworthian moments, your lover,
your family,
your pet, your favourite lines of verse,
or your quaint religious faith. There
is
nothing sacred about universality which
makes
the shared [14] Automatically better
than
the unshared. There is no automatic
privilege
of what you can get everybody to agree
to
(the universal) over what you cannot
(the
idiosyncratic).
This means that the fact that you have
obligations
to other people (not to bully them,
to join
them in overthrowing tyrants, to feed
them
when they are hungry) does not entail
that
what you share with other people is
more
important than anything else. What
you share
with them, when you are aware of such
moral
obligations, is not, I argued in Contingency,
'rationality' or 'human nature' or
'the fatherhood
of God' or 'a knowledge of the Moral
Law',
or anything other than ability to sympathize
with the pain of others. There is no
particular
reason to expect that your sensitivity
to
that pain, and your idiosyncratic loves,
are going to fit within one big overall
account
of how everything hangs together. There
is,
in short, not much reason to hope for
the
sort of single vision that I went to
college
hoping to get.
So much for how I came to the views
I currently
hold. As I said earlier, most people
find
these views repellent. My Contingency
book
got a couple of good reviews, but these
were
vastly outnumberedby reviews which
said that
the book was frivolous, confused andirresponsible.
The gist of the criticisms I get from
both
left and right is pretty much the same
as
the gist of the criticisms aimed at
Dewey
by the Thomists, the Straussians and
the
Marxists, back in me 1930s and 1940s.
Dewey
thought, as I now do, that there was
nothing
bigger, more permanent and more reliable,
behind our sense of moral obligation
to those
in pain than a certain contingent historical
phenomenon - the gradual spread of
the sense
that the pain of others matters, regardless
of whether they are of the same family,
tribe,
colour, religion, nation or intelligence
as oneself. This idea, Dewey thought,
cannot
be shown to be true by science, or
religion
or philosophy at least if 'shown
to be
true' means 'capable of being made
evident
to anyone, regardless of background'.
It
can only be made evident to people
whom it
is not too late to acculturate into
our own
particular, late-blooming, historically
contingent
form of life.
This Deweyan claim entails a picture
of human
beings as children of their time and
place,
without any significant metaphysical
or biological
[15] limits on their plasticity. It
means
that a sense of moral obligation is
a matter
of conditioning rather than of insight.
It
also entails that the notion of insight
(in
any area, physics as well as ethics)
as a
glimpse of what is there, apart from
any
human needs and desires, cannot be
made coherent.
As William James put it, 'The trail
of the
human serpent is over all.' More specifically,
our conscience and our aesthetic taste
are,
equally, products of the cultural environment
in which we grew up. We decent, liberal
humanitarian
types
(representatives of the moral community
to
which both my reviewers and I belong)
are
just luckier, not more insightful,
than the
bullies with whom we struggle.'
This view is often referred to dismissively
as 'cultural relativism'. But it is
not relativistic,
if that means saying that every moral
view
is as good as every other. Our moral
view
is, I firmly believe, much better than
any
competing view, even though there are
a lot
of people whom you will never be able
to
convert to it. It is one thing to say,
falsely,
that there is nothing to choose between
us
and the Nazis. It is another thing
to say,
correctly, that there is no neutral,
common
ground to which an experienced Nazi
philosopher
and I can repair in order to argue
out our
differences. That Nazi and I will always
strike one another as begging all the
crucial
questions, arguing in circles.
Socrates and Plato suggested that if
we tried
hard enough we should find beliefs
which
everybody found intuitively plausible,
and
that among these would be moral beliefs
whose
implications, when clearly realized,
would
make us virtuous as well as knowledgeable.
To thinkers like Allan Bloom (on the
Straussian
side) and Terry Eagleton (on the Marxist
side), there just must be such beliefs
unwobbling pivots that determine the
answer
to the question: Which moral or political
alternative is objectively valid? For
Deweyan
pragmatists like me, history and anthropology
are enough to show that there are no
unwobbling
pivots, and that seeking objectivity
is just
a matter of getting as much intersubjective
agreement as you can manage.
Nothing much has changed in philosophical
debates about whether objectivity is
more
than intersubjectivity since the time
I went
to college or, for that matter, since
the
time Hegel went to seminary. Nowadays
we
philosophers talk about 'moral language'
instead of 'moral experience', and
about
'contextualist theories of reference'
[16]
rather than about 'the relation between
subject
and object'. But this is just froth
on the
surface. My reasons for turning away
from
the anti-Deweyan views I imbibed at
Chicago
are pretty much the same reasons Dewey
had
for turning away from evangelical Christianity
and from the neo-Hegelian pantheism
which
he embraced in his 20s. They are also
pretty
much the reasons which led Hegel to
turn
away from Kant, and to decide that
both God
and the Moral Law had to be temporalized
and historicized to be believable.
I do not
think that I have more insight into
the debates
about our need for 'absolutes' than
I had
when I was 20, despite all the books
I have
read and arguments I have had in the
intervening
40 years. All those years of reading
and
arguing did was to let me spell out
my disillusionment
with Plato my conviction that philosophy
was no help in dealing with Nazis and
other
bullies in more detail, and to a
variety
of different audiences.
At the moment there are two cultural
wars
being waged in the United States .
The first
is the one described in detail by my
colleague
James Davison Hunter in his comprehensive
and informative Culture Wars: The Struggle
to Define America. This war between
the
people Hunter calls 'progressivists'
and
those he calls 'orthodox' is important.
It will decide whether our country
continues
along the trajectory defined by the
Bill
of Rights, the Reconstruction Amendments,
the building of the land-grant colleges,
female suffrage, the New Deal, Brown
v. Board
of Education, the building of the community
colleges, Lyndon Johnson's civil rights
legislation,
the feminist movement, and the gay
rights
movement. Continuing along this trajectory
would mean that America might continue
to
set an example of increasing tolerance
and
increasing equality. But it may be
that this
trajectory could be continued only
while
Americans' average real income continued
to rise. So 1973 may have been the
beginning
of the end: the end both of rising
economic
expectations and of the political consensus
that emerged from the New Deal. The
future
of American politics may be just a
series
of increasingly blatant and increasingly
successful variations on the Willie
Horton
spots. Sinclair Lewiss It Cant Happen
Here
may become an increasingly plausible
scenario.
Unlike Hunter, I feel no [17] need
to be
judicious and balanced in my attitude
toward
the two sides this first sort of culture
war. I see the 'orthodox' (the people
who
think that hounding gays out of the
military
promotes traditional family values)
as the
same honest, decent, blinkered, disastrous
people who voted for Hitler in
1933. I see the 'progressivists' as
defining
the only America I care about.
The second cultural war is being waged
in
magazines like Critical Inquiry and
Salmagundi,
magazines with high subscription rates
and
low circulations. It is between those
who
see modern liberal society as vitally
flawed
(the people handily lumped together
as 'postmodernists')
and typical left-wing Democrat professors
like myself, people who see ours as
a society
in which technology and democratic
institutions
can, with luck, collaborate to increase
equality
and decrease suffering. This war is
not very
important. Despite the conservative
columnists
who pretend to view with alarm a vast
conspiracy
(encompassing both the postmodernists
and
the pragmatists) to politicize the
humanities
and corrupt the youth, this war is
just a
tiny little dispute within what Hunter
calls
the 'progressivist' ranks.
People on the postmodernist side of
this
dispute tend to share Noam Chomsky's
view
of the United States as run by a corrupt
elite which aims at enriching itself
by immiserating
the Third World . From that perspective,
our country is not so much in danger
of slipping
into fascism as it is a country which
has
always been quasi-fascist. These people
typically
think that nothing will change unless
we
get rid of humanism', 'liberal individualism',
and 'technologism'. People like me
see nothing
wrong with any of these -isms, nor
with the
political and moral heritage of the
Enlightenment
- with the least common denominator
of Mill
and Marx, Trotsky and Whitman, William
James
and Vaclav Havel. Typically, we Deweyans
are sentimentally patriotic about America
willing to grant that it could slide
into
fascism at any time, but proud of its
past
and guardedly hopeful about its future.
Most people on my side of this second,
tiny,
upmarket cultural war have, in the
light
of the history of nationalized enterprises
and central planning in central and
eastern
Europe, given up on socialism. We are
willing
to grant that welfare state capitalism
is
the best we can hope for. Most of us
who
were brought up Trotskyite now feel
forced
[18] to admit that Lenin and Trotsky
did
more harm than good, and that Kerensky
has
gotten a bum rap for the past 70 years.
But
we see ourselves as still faithful
to everything
that was good in the socialist movement.
Those on the other side, however, still
insist
that nothing will change unless there
is
some sort of total revolution. Postmodernists
who consider themselves post-Marxists
still
want to preserve the sort of purity
of heart
which Lenin feared he might lose if
he listened
to too much Beethoven.
I am distrusted by both the 'orthodox'
side
in the important war and the 'postmodern'
side in the unimportant one, because
I think
that the 'postmoderns' are philosophically
right though politically silly, and
that
the 'orthodox' are philosophically
wrong
as well as politically dangerous. Unlike
both the orthodox and the postmoderns,
I
do not think that you can tell much
about
the worth of a philosopher's views
on topics
such as truth, objectivity and the
possibility
of a single vision by discovering his
politics,
or his irrelevance to politics. So
I do not
think it counts in favour of Dewey's
pragmatic
view of truth that he was a fervent
social
democrat, nor against Heidegger's criticism
of Platonic notions of objectivity
that he
was a Nazi, nor against Derrida's view
of
linguistic meaning that his most influential
American ally, Paul de Man, wrote a
couple
of anti-Semitic articles when he was
young.
The idea that you can evaluate a writer's
philosophical views by reference to
their
political utility seems to me a version
of
the bad Platonic-Straussian idea that
we
cannot have justice until philosophers
become
kings or kings philosophers.
Both the orthodox and the postmoderns
still
want a tight connection between people's
politics and their views on large theoretical
(theological, metaphysical, epistemological,
metaphilosophical) matters. Some postmodernists
who initially took my enthusiasm for
Derrida
to mean that I must be on their political
side decided, after discovering that
my politics
were pretty much those of Hubert Humphrey,
that I must have sold out. The orthodox
tend
to think that people who, like the
postmodernists
and me, believe neither in God nor
in some
suitable substitute, should think that
everything
is permitted, that everybody can do
what
they like. So they tell us that we
are either
inconsistent or self-deceptive in putting
forward our moral or political views.
[19] I take this near unanimity among
my
critics to show that most people
even a
lot of purportedly liberated postmodernists
still hanker for something like what
I
wanted when I was 15: a way of holding
reality
and justice in a single vision. More
specifically,
they want to unite their sense of moral
and
political responsibility with a grasp
of
the ultimate determinants of our fate.
They
want to see love, power and justice
as coming
together deep down in the nature of
things,
or in the human soul, or in the structure
of language, or somewhere. They want
some
sort of guarantee that their intellectual
acuity, and those special ecstatic
moments
which that acuity sometimes affords,
are
of some relevance to their moral convictions.
They still think that virtue and knowledge
are somehow linked that being right
about
philosophical matters is important
for right
action. I think this is important only
occasionally
and incidentally.
I do not, however, want to argue that
philosophy
is socially useless. Had there been
no Plato,
the Christians would have had a harder
time
selling the idea that all God really
wanted
from us was fraternal love. Had there
been
no Kant, the nineteenth century would
have
iad a harder time reconciling Christian
ethics
with Darwin 's story about the descent
of
man. Had there been no Darwin , it
would
have 3een harder for Whitman and Dewey
to
detach the Americans from their belief
that
they were God's chosen people, to get
them
to start standing on their own feet.
Had
there been no Dewey and no Sidney Hook,
American
intellectual leftists of the 1930S
would
have been as buffaloed by the Marxists
as
were their counterparts in France and
in
Latin America. Ideas do, indeed, have
consequences.
But the fact that ideas have consequences
does not mean that we philosophers,
we specialists
in ideas, are in a key position. We
are not
here to provide principles or foundations
or deep theoretical diagnoses, or a
synoptic
vision. When I am asked (as, alas,
I often
am) what I take contemporary philosophy's
'mission' or 'task' to be, I get tonguetied.
The best I can do is to stammer that
we philosophy
professors are people who have a certain
familiarity with a certain intellectual
tradition,
as chemists have a certain familiarity
with
what happens when you mix various substances
together. We can offer some advice
about
what will happen when you try to combine
or to [20] separate certain ideas,
on the
basis of our knowledge of the results
of
past experiments. By doing so, we may
be
able to help you hold your time in
thought.
But we are not the people to come to
if you
want confirmation that the things you
love
with all your heart are central to
the structure
of the universe, or that your sense
of moral
responsibility is 'rational and objective'
rather than 'just' a result of how
you were
brought up.
There are still, as C. S. Peirce put
it,
'philosophical slop-shops on every
corner'
which will provide such confirmation.
But
there is a price. To pay the price
you have
to turn your back on intellectual history
and on what Milan Kundera calls 'the
fascinating
imaginative realm where no one owns
the truth
and everyone has the right to be understood
. . . the wisdom of the novel'. You
risk
losing the sense of finitude, and the
tolerance,
which result from realizing how very
many
synoptic visions there have been, and
how
little argument can do to help you
choose
among them. Despite my relatively early
disillusionment
with Platonism, I am very glad that
I spent
all those years reading philosophy
books.
For I learned something that still
seems
very important: to distrust the intellectual
snobbery which originally led me to
read
them. If I had not read all those books,
I might never have been able to stop
looking
for what Derrida calls 'a full presence
beyond
the reach of play', for a luminous,
self-justifying,
self-sufficient synoptic vision.
By now I am pretty sure that looking
for
such a presence and such a vision is
a bad
idea. The main trouble is that you
might
succeed and your success might let
you imagine
that you have something more to rely
on than
the tolerance and decency of your fellow
human beings. The democratic community
of
Dewey's dreams is a community in which
nobody
imagines that. It is a community in
which
everybody thinks that it is human solidarity,
rather than knowledge of something
not merely
human, that really matters. The actually
existing approximations to such a fully
democratic,
fully secular community now seem to
me the
greatest achievements of our species.
In
comparison, even Hegel's and Proust's
books
seem optional, orchidaceous extras.
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