Tagged: adorno
Adorno on Kantian autonomy, or: how can one freely be bound to law?

Alas, kites can be neither free nor autonomous.
What Kant grapples with in his moral philosophy, Adorno argues, is the tension between freedom and necessity as it pertains to human action. At the most obvious level the tension presents itself as the impossibility of moral human action in a world governed by causal laws. Insofar as we are empirical beings constrained by the doctrine of cause and effect, we cannot be held accountable for our actions, for we have no more agency in conducting ourselves than the billiard ball bouncing off the pool cue. The iron necessity of causality in this case subjugates us to the dictates of nature. We do not choose natural law, and yet we must abide by it. Hence we are heteronomous – literally, governed by the laws of another – and so unfree.
At this juncture one may very well conclude that genuine freedom involves action according to no rule, which springs from some unnatural font of spontaneity (e.g. an immaterial soul). Indeterminism fails to provide a substantive grounding for free action, however, for the same reasons that nature’s determinism does. Just imagine somebody who acted according to no principles whatsoever – whose action sprung mysteriously from some unknown source. Their choice in deciding to do X over Y would be unintelligible, more like the accidental outcome of a die roll than of the sort of deliberation characteristic of decisionmaking. So the way out from determinism to freedom can’t just involve the negation of determinism.
Instead, Kant’s answer is that moral choice must involve the right sort of determination: determination by reason. To act morally is to act in accordance with reason, and to act in accordance with reason means obeying strictly its laws. What differentiates these laws from those of nature is that the laws of reason are self-imposed – they are autonomous, auto-nomos, self-law. Adorno points out the tension in this approach: to secure freedom, Kant must establish a necessity in the moral sphere akin to the causal necessity present in the empirical sphere. Adorno puts it like this:
“…reason generally makes its appearance with the claim of deductive necessity, with the claim that everything it implies follows in accordance with the propositions of logic. And this element of necessity already presupposes an affinity… with the causality that is supposed to hold sway in the realm of empirical phenomena… the whole of Kant’s moral philosophy is tied to the concept of autonomy which is regarded as the realm where freedom and necessity meet. What this means is that the moral laws are indeed the laws of freedom – because as a rational being I give them to myself without making myself dependent on any external factor. At the same time, however, they have the character of laws because rational action and rational deduction cannot be understood except as acting and thinking in conformity with laws and rules.” (Problems of Moral Philosophy, Lecture 8, pg.80)
A problem immediately arises: in what sense can we act autonomously in accord with reason, if we are empirical beings who inhabit the determined world of nature? Adorno claims that “here Kant falls into a trap of his own making” in articulating a solution to this problem (81). Kant argues variously in the Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals and the Critique of Practical Reason that “as empirical beings we experience the obligation to perform certain actions, or to leave them undone” (Adorno 81). Proceeding from the fact of this experience, Kant asks as to the conditions for its possibility: what makes possible the experience of conscience, of the sense that one should and should not engage in certain actions? Such transcendental critique comes unsurprisingly as part and parcel with the rest of the Kantian system, but in this case Adorno points out its potentially damning implications:
“…if [Kant] desires to exclude every empirical element from his foundation of moral philosophy – and that is his aim – he cannot then appeal to the empirical existence of the so-called moral compulsion in man himself because this compulsion is itself an empirical fact… in short, the unity of moral obligation and reason that Kant insists on is not altogether unproblematic if we reflect a little more deeply on this obligation; indeed it becomes highly dubious.” (Lecture 8, pg 82)
The quite obvious Kantian response in this case involves an injunction against mistaking the empirical conditions by which we come to know a phenomenon for some essential feature of that phenomenon. In other words, such a criticism mistakes the process by which we contingently come to experience our moral duty for the characteristic qualities of that moral duty itself. It is a similar mistake to one who takes the truths of mathematics to be contingent upon empirical observations about the world, just because one has learned them through such observations.
But in this case such a response does not save Kant, because it introduces a rupture within the human being which is the subject of morality, splitting asunder the experience of morality from its essential nature. There are three possible ways we can conceive the relationship between the empirical experience of moral duty (conscience) and the “formal, abstract shape of the moral law” for which that experience serves as evidence.
First option: Conscience is coextensive with the moral law. This is a highly repugnant conclusion. To accept this is, in essence, to deny that there is any thing as a moral law in the first place. For it identifies the empirical constraints on moral thought (the psychological experience of moral duty) with the moral duty itself. One might imagine this position as involving an acceptance that “whatever one feels is moral, is moral; whatever one feels is immoral, is immoral.” An unacceptable conclusion, in short.
Second option: Conscience is totally separate from the moral law (though it grounds the moral law). This is a more palatable conclusion – presumably the one Kant took himself to be endorsing, in the last instance – but one which Adorno argues cannot be the case. For suppose it were true: that there was no substantive relationship between conscience and the moral law. Or, to put it more precisely, that there was no relationship between the motivational import provided by conscience and the demands lain upon it by the moral law. In this case, any case of moral behavior would be a merely accidental one of the sort Kant routinely decries in the Groundwork, e.g. of the shopkeeper who treats customers fairly not because it is moral, but because it brings them the greatest profit. Except in this the explanation for all moral behavior would be that, e.g. the shopkeeper treats customers fairly only because of some empirical-psychological motivation stemming from their conscience, and not because the moral law commands them to do so. In this case the pure abstract formality of the moral law might be preserved, but at the expense of its possible enactment.
Third option: Conscience is related somehow to the moral law. This is the only option which remains, but that “somehow” is a problem which – Adorno argues – we cannot solve using only the tools given to us by Kant’s system.
Adorno concludes his exceedingly fascinating eighth lecture with a concise statement of Kant’s, distinguishing the determinism of nature from that of the moral law:
“‘Reason therefore’, he continues, ‘provides laws which are imperatives, that is, objective laws of freedom which tell us what ought to happen – although perhaps it never does happen,’ – you see here [Kant’s] indifference towards effects – ‘therein differing from laws of nature, which relate only to that which happens. These laws [of reason] are therefore to be entitled practical laws.'” (Lecture 8, pg. 88)
Stripping down to philosophical kernels (part 2)
But what exactly offends so greatly when we engage in philosophical stripping? Isn’t it rather the case that, as Aristotle puts it in his Ethics, “our discussion will be adequate if it has as much clearness as the subject-matter admits of, for precision is not to be sought for alike in all discussions, any more than in all the products of the crafts.” The insight here pertains to the contextuality of our inquiries: the method of our investigation and the precision of our measurement must respond to our subject.
Our imagined dispute between Adorno and Aristotle lies in their disagreement over the criterion for determining conceptual inadequacy. For Adorno, full adequacy could only (and inconceivably) arrive at the moment of total identity between thought and world, in which the object of our cognitive judgment is rendered bare to us in its entirety – in which thought becomes just as whole as the world which it reaches out to. Aristotle proceeds more modestly: full adequacy involves the proper sort of fit between thought and world, and what sort of fit that is involves an investigation of the object of thought and our own aims in thinking it. Particle physics admits of more precision in measurement than ecology, but this in no way means either field is more adequate to its phenomena. It is rather that to prove the existence of gravitational waves requires a two-and-a-half mile long apparatus sensitive to perturbations of “smaller than one-ten-thousandth the diameter of a proton (10-19 meter),” whereas to discover the detrimental effects of mercury on a particular ecosystem requires a different set of tools and standards.
At first glance Aristotle’s sensibly conservative view may seem to have the upper hand above Adorno’s impossibly demanding method. But, it turns out, we may not yet be off the hook. Two concerns give reason to push us from Aristotle to Adorno: the circularity of assessing conceptual adequacy by way of “proper fit,” and the reasonable notion that philosophy as a knowledge-domain ought not only give us insight about parts of the world, as particle physics or ecology might, but should rather present us with an account of the whole of the world in terms of what is most fundamental about it. The first concern, we’ll see, makes way for the second.
So let’s say we agree with Aristotle – our concepts are adequate insofar as they properly fit the subject matter they seek to describe. Well, what’s a proper fit? It seems we’ve just punted the question of adequacy down the field. Our goal was to discover the criterion for ascribing adequacy to concepts; our discovered criterion ends up being that a concept is adequate when it properly – or, should I say, adequately – fits the object we are conceptualizing. But this sort of adequacy was precisely what was at stake in our deliberation, and our criterion seems to come up empty.
What would it possibly mean for a conceptualization to be adequate to its subject matter? Suppose we have a model like this: when thinking about some subject matter S, our conceptualization of it C is adequate just in case it meets our criterion of adequacy R. For example, when we think about the existence of gravitational waves, our conceptualization of that existence involves (among other things) a sensitivity to instrumental perturbations of 10-19 meters, and so meets our criterion of adequacy involving standards of precision and accuracy (among other things). But, for any conceptualization, how do we determine the criterion of adequacy R? How do we know, for example, that our concept of gravitational waves must be sensitive to one standard of measurement, but our concept of an omelette does not? None of us, I hope, measures out the egg content of their omelette to the attometer. It seems, in other words, that we must have some criterion for choosing the correct criterion of adequacy R. But to choose such a criterion we’ll need another, and to choose that one we’ll need another, and to choose… well, it’s a long and unproductive tumble from there.
Stripping down to philosophical kernels (part 1)
To cut through the confusions of theorizing our world, messy as it is, philosophers strip – they remove features of the object of inquiry until they reach some essential kernel. These kernels offer enough meat for substantial conclusions and generalizations, without the mess of irrelevant contingency to hamper philosophical progress. Indeed, on some conceptions this just is what philosophy amounts to: stripping down and generalizing based on what’s left. For example, in discussions on ethics, one might treat human beings as moral agents insofar as they possess the capacity for rationality. All of those other features about human beings – their bodies, preferences, emotions, and what have you – are set aside by the ethical theorist for the purposes of their analysis.
Typical objections to the stripping method rely on the notion that something is lost when a thing is considered in terms of its particular essential kernel. When we take human moral agency to consist in the capacity for rationality, our account is defective insofar as we have left other things out of the picture. Stripping, in other words, is inherently reductive. Perhaps the most dedicated critique along these lines is Theodor Adorno’s negative dialectics, which argues that thought always fails to do justice to its object. Whenever we conceive of a particular object (or set of particular objects) under a concept, our conception necessarily fails to encompass the whole of that object (or set of objects).
For example, suppose I conceive of my feline companion, Bashir, as a cat. I will (quite accurately) capture the fact that Bashir is a four-legged, furry felis catus whose ancestors were quite revered in Egypt. But, I’ll fail to capture his propensity to beg for food by standing on his hind legs, as well as his particular sort of mercurial disposition toward baths. And, even the brief description I’ve just provided of those particularities invariably comes short of describing exactly who Bashir is.
For Adorno, the failure of our concepts to make good on their promises of rendering the whole of the world intelligible gives us a duty to engage in ongoing self-critique. Our failed conceptualizations produce suffering: first, of the sort that comes intrinsically from the inability of our conceptualization to make good on its implicit promise to adequately think the object of thought; second, of the sort that arises from the consequences of acting on such a failed theorization of the world. Though Adorno rejects the notion that we’ll ever reach a state of identity between thought and world (in which, as Hegel says, the real is the rational, and the rational the real), he does take it that we can move toward progressively less inadequate understandings. Indeed, such is the progress of philosophy.