IN DEFENSE OF PHILOSOPHY
by
SANTIAGO ZABALA & ROBERT SINNERBRINK
___________________________________
Santiago
Zabala is
ICREA Research Professor of Philosophy at the University of
Barcelona. His books include The Hermeneutic Nature of Analytic
Philosophy (2008), The Remains of Being (2009),
and, most recently, Hermeneutic Communism (2011, coauthored
with G. Vattimo), all published by Columbia University Press.
Robert
Sinnerbrink is Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at Macquarie University,
Sydney. He is the author of New Philosophies of Film: Thinking
Images (Continuum, 2011), Understanding Hegelianism
(Acumen, 2007), and co-editor of Critique Today (Brill,
2006).
The
lack of emergency is the greatest
where self-certainty has become unsurpassable,
where everything is held to be calculable and,
above all, where it is decided, without a preceding question,
who we are and what we are to do.
Heidegger
World
Philosophy Day, which the United Nations Educational Scientific
and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) celebrates every year on
the third Thursday of November, emphasizes the enduring "value
of philosophy for the development of human thought, for each
culture and for each individual.”
But
we are not so sure whether we will celebrate the occasion in
Australia and Spain, where we live -- two democratic societies
that pride themselves on their commitment to principles of liberty,
democratic freedom and social justice. Unfortunately, some of
our politicians seem to disregard these principles when it comes
to assessing the value of philosophy for their own society.
While
Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott has vowed that his new
government will target philosophical research projects funded
by the Australian Research Council that he deems to be futile
or wasteful, Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, has approved
a new education law (with no support in Congress) where philosophy
will be reduced to a marginal discipline in high school. Although
both politicians are obviously using the economic crisis as
an excuse, it is clear there is more at stake as eminent Australian
and Spanish philosophers such as Paul Redding, Jeff Malpas,
Amelia Valcarcel [Sp], and Fernando Savater [Sp] recently declared.
It
is our obligation as philosophers and citizens to celebrate
this day by defending the role and the meaning philosophy has
for society, in order to overcome the ideology behind these
conservative politicians, who seem so ready to restrict young
people's opportunities to learn philosophy or to make philosophical
research more available to the general public.
But
in order to do this we are not going to defend philosophy pragmatically
as something that can be equipped with critical reasoning skills
that are highly prized in today's complex economies. Rather,
we shall defend it existentially, that is, as an invitation
to become thoughtful and critical members of a democratic society
as the UNESCO suggests. But in order to do this we must emphasize
three fundamental features that must be taken into consideration
when one defends philosophical thought in society.
Philosophy
more generally can help us cultivate critical inquiry, questioning
norms, and challenging opinion in ways that will enable citizens
to acknowledge their differences, resolve their disputes, and
argue for the best aspects of their cultural and political community.
The
first is the dominance of economic benefit as the sole determinant
of value that counts in contemporary political discourse. Not
all things, however, that we value in a democratic society --
such as freedom of thought and expression, personal and political
autonomy, acknowledgment of different cultural values and ways
of life -- can be measured in strictly utilitarian terms, or
have a specific dollar value attached to them. Philosophy can
play an important role here in questioning the unthinking elevation
of economic benefit as the ‘highest good,’ and to
argue for exploring alternative moral, ethical and cultural
values of benefit to society.
The second is the devaluing of the role of philosophical inquiry
as futile or wasteful, as though we have no need for fundamental
questioning of our basic principles, values or prejudices. The
suspicion towards intellectuals that this episode conveys is
harmful to the very idea of democracy, as though curbing free
inquiry by society's thinkers and critics were somehow compatible
with the democratic ethos. We should ask why some democratic
leaders today seem so suspicious of philosophical inquiry and
the critical questioning of values of importance to us all.
The
third is the need to articulate the value of philosophical questioning
and critical reflection for the flourishing of democracy. As
renowned American philosophy Stanley Cavell put it, philosophy
is "education for grownups," which also means an education
for democracy, for self-governing citizens versed in the art
of thinking for oneself. Such an education should begin already
in high school to give students an opportunity to discover the
power of exercising reason and the social importance of questioning
one's world. Philosophy more generally can help us cultivate
critical inquiry, questioning norms, and challenging opinion
in ways that will enable citizens to acknowledge their differences,
resolve their disputes, and argue for the best aspects of their
cultural and political community. In this way, philosophy makes
a vital pedagogical and intellectual contribution to the cultivation
of a democratic ethos in society.
These
three features are all related one way or another to existentialism.
This is not only one of the major traditions in European philosophy
that has profoundly influenced our thinking on the nature of
the self, but it has also deeply informed our social and political
role as individuals responsible for our actions in the world.
This is why contemporary philosophers who draw heavily on existentialism
and related traditions tend to focus on everyone's rights to
choose freely their political (Richard Rorty), religious (Charles
Taylor), or even sexual (Judith Butler) preferences independently
of external forces. This kind of right and freedom requires
citizens to develop their capacity for critical reflection and
debate.
Also,
existentialists are often historical in their approach drawing
upon previous traditions of inquiry and bringing them to bear
on contemporary concerns. This is not simply a matter of using
past examples to make an argument, but rather it's because we
are historical beings in our very core. As historical beings,
we can choose what, how, and who to be as long as our existence
is free from artificial impositions which frame and often hinder
our possibilities.
If
many philosophers in different cultures have drawn upon and
developed existentialist ideas for their own investigations
in a variety of cultural and intellectual contexts, it is because
of its potential to help us understand our situation and to
fight the imposition of alienating restrictions on our freedoms
and responsibilities. This is why questions such as what critical
role the philosopher should play in society, and how our cultural
context affects this value, are philosophical questions of the
first order.
As
we suggest, Prime Ministers Abbott and Rajoy are targeting a
discipline that belongs to this vigorous tradition of inquiry
and which promises to make valuable contributions to our philosophical
understanding of selfhood and religion -- two key areas of intense
cultural and political concern today across the globe. And this
capacity for reasonable freedom and critical debate are needed
more than ever if we are to confront the ethical and political
challenges posed by globalization.
This
is why it is a good day to remind our democratic elected politicians,
whether in Australia, Spain, or anywhere in the world that it
would be wise to recognize, rather than marginalize, philosophy's
contribution to democracy.
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