Tagged: marx

The political rhetoric of reason

reading silence.png

A certain view of politics conceives of it as a convincing, by pen or gun. Certainly political philosophy lends itself well to this conception, being, as it is, in the business of convincing the reader the truth of the political conclusions offered by the text. One succeeds as a political philosopher when one convinces their interlocutor that one’s proposed system of politics rises above all others. One succeeds as a professional philosopher when one convinces their colleagues that one’s ideas are meritorious, either because they are true or, as is more likely, because they substantively further the interminable dialogue of the profession.

On a certain very cynical conception of politics, one will take this convincing to be rhetorical rather than truth-seeking. Rhetoricians convince without regards to the truth of what they convince. What differentiates the rhetor from the philosopher is the latter’s concern for the truth, regardless of how (un)convincing it might appear. One need not look far for examples of the counterintuitive in political philosophy. Nozick argues that taxation is tantamount to theft and, indeed, slavery. Marx argues that a voluntary, free labor contract between a worker and their employer is fundamentally exploitative. Rawls argues that wealth inequality is preferable to equality because it makes the worst-off better-off in absolute terms. But of course it is not merely enough to state the counterintuitive and expect assent. All three philosophers proceed from assumptions which ostensibly demand compliance from any reasonable human, and go on their merry way demonstrating the implications of such assumptions.

The problem with rhetoric in the written form: one must meet their audience as they come. A text on its own permits no discretion as to who partakes in its contents (well, at the very least they must be literate). A political community must meet its audience as they come. A society on its own permits no discretion as to who partakes in its practices and institutions. At this juncture it must be clarified that these are idealizing assumptions which presuppose an impossible independence between language and its participants, between a society and its citizens, when of course these categories are mutually constitutive. A text prefigures its audience just as a society prefigures those who live in it. The reader introduced to language takes up well-worn conventions which undergird even their most elaborate experimentations with the word. The citizen introduced to society develops their characteristic habits in context of social practices and institutions — via education, religion, media exposure, and so forth. But idealizing assumptions are appropriate when investigating the logic of a discourse — of politics and political philosophy — which conceives of itself in the ideal, as the derivation of what ought to be without necessary regard for what is. And in investigating the idealizing logic of such a discourse, with the recognition that its methodological presuppositions are not quite borne out in the world, we may produce a systematic clarity with regards to its contents. So we return to the idealized problematic of rhetoric and politics: one must meet their audience as they come.

There is nothing complex about this problem. K. believes fundamentalist religious doctrine should serve as the law of the land; M. ,an atheist, thinks religion ought be abolished. A political philosopher must convince both of a single conclusion; a legislator must convince both to obey the same law. If we could speak face-to-face with K. and M. we would tailor our talking points to their particular character. To K. we might focus on doctrinal reasoning against the notion that religious law should serve as general law, that to think of such debases the divine, that in any case it would only foment further religious persecution, and so on. To M. we might focus on the infeasibility of such drastic reform, on the requirements of pluralism in a democratic society, on the possibility of separating religious life from secular life, etc. In being able to address the particularity of K.’s and M.’s concerns our rhetoric achieves maximal effectiveness, for, in a manner of speaking, we know and can choose exactly what buttons we need to press. But in our writing we are agnostic to such particularity in our readers. Rawls’ veil of ignorance is instructive. The veil of ignorance serves not just as a conceptual tool for analyzing political arrangements but also as a reflection upon the position of the author in relation to her readers. She knows naught of their desires, dispositions, dreams, and yet must meet all of these as they come. What to do?

A more thorough cynic, or perhaps skeptic, would argue that reason was invented precisely to solve this problem: that it is merely a subset of rhetoric which aims to address all people — all rational beings — rather than individuals or smaller groups, and that truth is just shorthand for a universally-applicable rhetoric. And some truth indeed lies behind this cynicism. Reason gives one access to a technique of convincing which, unique among all other such techniques, can convince anybody. Specifically, reason binds anybody, insofar as they are rational, which really amounts to a tautology: reason binds all for whom reason is binding. The power of it is that it is so hard, so undesirable to be irrational, and even to ask why one ought to be reasonable amounts to a performative self-contradiction. The issue cannot even be formulated and, when we try, we find out we have been playing reason’s game all along. To convince someone strictly through reason amounts to providing a valid proof without premises (in the strongest case) or, at the very least, a proof with premises everybody should or actually does accept (a case which might, upon analysis, turn out to be equivalent to the former). Regardless of anything else about a person, they cannot help but accept a valid proof with no premises — at least insofar as we can communicate with them at all. One who cannot be compelled by reason, we think, cannot be compelled by anything.

It is banal to say that one can investigate the presuppositions of a political philosopher by analyzing what goes into their concept of a rational being. The key to all of Hobbes lies in his conception of a rational human abstracted away from society: a self-interested actor who places supreme value on their self-preservation, and who pursues this interest by any means necessary. From this mostly-formal conception of a rational human, everything else about the Hobbesian architectonic falls into place: the sacrifice of freedom toward the maximization of self-preservation via the social contract. The State as omnipotent and omniscient protector. Leviathan.

Banal because what we are really saying is that the philosopher becomes a rhetor. The transformation occurs, from Dr. Jekyll to Mr. Hyde, when substantive features of an audience are snuck in to what supposedly should apply to any audience at all. One reads Hobbes and wonders, how could it be that one sees all humans as being so close-minded, so selfish? I am not such a human; nor my family; nor my friends. One objects to the Hobbesian account of rationality, which purported to describe a universality inherent in all beings, on the grounds that it has failed to deliver on such universality. A single counterexample crumbles the whole elaborate structure because the point was not to deliver an empirical generalization of behavior, open to exception, but rather a normative ground for the legitimacy of behavior.

Why have we not focused on human nature? We very well might have; it functions quite similarly in providing an axiomatic basis for the derivation of conclusions about just political society. It is likely right to conceive of rationality as one of the features comprising human nature — for some philosophers, as the exclusive feature comprising human nature. The reason to emphasize rationality in particular is to highlight the logic of political philosophy, its constitutive form. Within the content of their theories, political philosophers may very well appeal to human nature as the substantive basis for their conclusions. But even if the political philosopher takes the content of their theories to follow from an account of human nature, such an account must itself follow from rationality, because it must be able to convince any reader of their text. If the account of human nature appealed to could not convince a rational reader, then we are left with the aforementioned problem of Hobbes, in which we might simply deny whatever aspects of human nature are not rationally binding. Indeed, perhaps the only component of human nature which cannot be reasonably denied is that of rationality. Regardless of content, what formally constrains political philosophers is the requirement that their argument be convincing to any who might read their work. For it is precisely the goal of the political philosopher, who seeks not only some abstract truth of the matter but to make such truth operative in the world, to convince their audience of their position’s legitimacy.

The necessity of convincing most apparently binds the philosopher of democracy, for whom the fact that a member of the polis might not assent to its laws presents an obvious objection. One who grounds political legitimacy directly in the will of the governed would surely see a failure of assent as damning. But even those who do not must yet do some convincing. Plato had to convince the philosopher-kings. And even the most antidemocratic thinker must end up convincing themselves with their theorization.

Such self-convincing cannot be presumed on the basis that one must tautologically be convinced by one’s own beliefs. In a sense this is obviously true. But one can only find their own beliefs convincing insofar as they are justified. And justification, in order to function as such, must appeal to some public and non-individual criteria. For suppose it did not — that justification could appeal only to some private knowledge to which the despot had privileged access, and which was inarticulable in terms of public reason. Would the despot, in this case, find their politics justified by merit of a particular sensation which corresponded to their entertainment of some political conclusion or another? (e.g. “it seems right to me that. . .”). How would they know that such particular sensation was really a sensation of feeling-right-that? And how could they confirm that their particular sensation at an earlier time was the same as their particular sensation at a later time? And what if their sensations came into conflict?

In short: even a despotic political regime must be reasonably convincing. But insofar as the despot may be convinced of their regime, and insofar as such convincing takes place in the space of public reason, then — assuming such convincing has proceeded legitimately — is it not the case that all reasonable beings should assent to it? It turns out we have no despotism, after all, for a despot with the assent of the governed ends up being a democratic ruler. Democracy inevitably awaits us at the conclusion of our inquiry as the only possibly legitimate form of political governance; it ends up that all we must flesh out are its contents.

Breaking intuition’s chains (part 1)

intuition cave

The tradition of all dead generations weighs like a nightmare on the brains of the living.
Marx, The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Napoleon, 1852

Wont to think of intuition as Avicenna did, a divine illumination, a serendipitous co-harmony between our limited intellect and the celestial emanations, an experience rather like surfacing for air, we should remind ourselves that we drown in it. Intuition is all well and good when it delivers us to some desired result of inquiry, when it accords with the world and the rest of our considered beliefs and provides impetus for further investigation. But we should recognize that intuition is an affliction, an inescapable inability to grasp a belief as anything but true, an optical illusion of the intellect. One does not choose intuition. It simply emerges, fully-formed as though Athena from the head of Zeus, and commits us brutely to a particular train of thought. More than any amount of education or training it is intuition which births the philosopher, the one who follows it with such singleminded passion that they scarce see the scorched countryside they leave in their wake. It is very possible to give up everything for an intuition; to condemn a whole project of thought, entire fields of study, a career, a life. But intuition on its own presents no signs of such external imperative. For by the time intuition strikes us it is already far too late. We only seize upon a truth as a fly seizes upon the web of the spider or the nectar of Dionaea muscipula. To its credit intuition coerces us to its side with the common decency to make us feel such a move agreeable (and do not say coercion functions inappropriately here; how else to describe the interaction between a student and their wizened professor who asks, prefiguring the answer, “but what do you think of this case?. . .”). And we are always chained to intuition by ghastly figures: philosophical zombies, botched products of teletransportation, daemons, swamp-men, a whole cryptid menagerie pushing levers and turning cranks in the recesses of imagination, grinning, hoisting lights like anglerfish.

In his 2013 “The Taming of Philosophy” Michael Della Rocca makes roughly the same point albeit in more sobering language, though one still gets the creeping impression from his paper that philosophers one by one have succumbed to a sinister entity parasitic on thought, method, and argumentation; in other words to intuition. Della Rocca argues that reliance on intuition leads to “the ungrounded [read: illegitimate] limitation of philosophy’s engagement with reality,” condemning us at once to a conservativism (of endorsing status quo belief), psychologism (of reading facts about human psychology as facts about the nature of reality), and arbitrariness (of choosing between competing intuitions) (190).

Della Rocca’s criticism elucidates a crucial question for any philosopher relying on intuitions: what are the conditions for the possibility of intuition yielding substantive philosophical conclusions (rather than, say, data about contingent psychological features of the human mind)? For the natural charge against intuition specifically and introspective philosophy generally is that it is a mere psychologism. It purports to offer fundamental facts about the nature of reality while peddling nothing but contingent facts about one’s mental state at a given moment. A contender for a response to this transcendental question is Kant’s — against charges that the First Critique was mere psychologism, he replied that the object of his study was both necessary and universal among all cognizing beings. With necessity and universality come philosophical significance. To make the distinction perfectly clear we need only consider the difference between one’s intuition that vanilla ice cream is delicious, which is neither necessary (imagine you grew up hating sweets) nor universal (there are those who hate vanilla and eat strictly chocolate), and one’s intuition that bodies in space must be extended. To be sure these may both present themselves as immediately plausible conclusions about the world, and we might even preface either judgment with an of course. But only one merits the designation of “intuition” in any philosophically meaningful sense, and it is not the intuitive nature of the conclusion per se which merits such a designation but rather the judgment’s necessity and universality. Surely an unsatisfying response to the intuitionist, for here the whole significance of intuition drops out as totally peripheral to the truth of what is intuited.

Indeed, Della Rocca rightly points out this tension in the method of the intuitionist: insofar as they are an intuitionist, they seek to develop a philosophical system which accommodates intuitions. But given that truth about reality stands as the object of our inquiry, philosophical or otherwise, shouldn’t it rather be that we develop philosophical systems which accommodate reality? But, in what really becomes the only disappointment in an otherwise outstanding piece, he never treats the intuition itself as something real. Rather he can only conceive of it as an epiphenomenal pointing-at some belief which, regrettably and all-too-often, ends up being false. Where the intuitionist claims the irrelevancy of the contingent conditions under which one’s mind produces an intuition as to the truth of its contents, Della Rocca (rightly, again) adopts the negation of this naivete: if the conditions are suspect, so too should be our faith in the content. But, as happens often the negation of a falsity, rather than bringing us straight at the truth, only makes apparent the juncture at which thought has taken the wrong turn. To put it rather crudely the debate focuses on the relation between the form of the intuition (the manner in which and by which the intuition presents itself) and its content (the belief the intuition renders obvious or obviously false). Intuitions are either damned to irrelevance by merit of its inadequate relation to the content of the belief (“…it seems obvious only because you were raised a certain way!”) or otherwise defended (“…well yes, but mathematicians and geometers too must be raised a certain way, and we do not doubt Pythagoras’ theorem nonetheless.”). Della Rocca wages battle admirably on this terrain, but not even the greatest tactical skill can prevail in a campaign in which the enemy sets the terms of engagement. For the intuitionist in times of trouble may always play their trump: “you have argued very well that our conviction in the truth or falsity of a belief is an illegitimate hold-over of biology, upbringing, and environment, a contingent psychological fact that cannot serve as the basis of philosophical knowledge. But know this — in damning us you damn yourself, for all things you believe and say succumb to the same mighty critique; if we are not left with intuitionism, we are left with barbarism.” One can hardly negotiate when such antinomy, the philosophical equivalent of a mutually assured destruction, lurks at the end of the discussion.

(part 2 here)